Radiant bake floors? Are they any appropriate? Our builder is suggesting radiant heat floors and I surmise though I'd...

Our builder is suggesting radiant heat floors and I surmise though I'd like the thaw out floors; if we have a problem next to it, we would have to gash up tile floors. Anybody had experience next to this?
Answers:    All righty then - I'm an installer here surrounded by Canada and can positively say that the chief issue in service for radiant floor heat lies within the peripferal equipment and not the PEX (infloor) tubing itself. The PEX tubing is polymeric and adjectives manufacturers hold at least a 25 year warranty on their tubing. So most service, years after installation, is any with the pumps or boilers, which should be readilly accessable surrounded by the basement or powered closet.
While radiant floor heating does tend to save floors 'warm', the main ambition is to heat the floor mass, which is substantial, which in turn radiate out to the home. If the heat loss contained by your home is very small, (i.e. - ultra updated design and build), the heat input to replace the warmth loss may be small enough that a 'warm' floor may not be notice.
You can put ANY floor covering over radiant, even wood, although there are parameter, which need to be met. Also - you necessitate to humidify your home, regardless of what type of heating you own so as not to dry out your hardwood floors or furniture. It's a bit more imperative with hardwood over radiant.
If you can, try to go and get the tubing into a floor pour, or at least over the subfloor. Staple-up works, but by far is the least possible efficient opening to use this system.
Please - please - please get a pro to do this work. Not your GC, not his brother-in-law, not your uncle Fred - and typically, not an nouns conditioning contractor. You need someone who understand the nuances of this type of heat and how it should be installed specific to your situation.

Best of luck
Ive known a few relations that have them. They take home your house nice and cozy. Ive never heard of any problems, but i would at smallest have a professional install it